Justine Cooper (artist)

Justine Cooper is an Australian artist born in Sydney, Australia in 1968 and is currently residing in New York.

Cooper is an interdisciplinary artist investigating the intersections between culture, science and medicine.[1] Cooper uses various media to create her artworks, including animation, video, and photography, and she frequently incorporates medical imaging technologies including MRI, ultrasound, DNA sequencing, scanning electron microscopy into her works.[2]

Cooper's work has been exhibited at The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; the Singapore Art Museum, the Netherlands Media Art Institute and at the NTT InterCommunication Center, Tokyo, RiAus in Adelaide, and in the exhibition WetLab: The New Nexus Between Art and Science in 2005.[3]

Cooper’s artwork is represented in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Powerhouse Museum (Sydney), The Queensland Art Gallery and the Australian Center for the Moving Image, amongst other public and private collections.

Her 1998 word Rapt uses Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans of the artist's own body.

Works

References

  1. Frost, Andrew. Scanlines.
  2. Palmer, Daniel. 'Digital Art: A Rich Ecology,' The Australia Council.
  3. BENJAMIN GENOCCHIO, "The Haunting Terrain Between Creation and Science", 6 February 2005

Further reading

External links

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